Policing and the violence of white supremacy

It’s been a hard week. The news has been filled with images of attacks on Black lives, from violent NYPD incidents and arrests to murder.

On a national level, we’ve seen the country stand and grieve with the family of Ahmaud Arbery. We also want to say the names of Nina Pop, a Black trans woman who was murdered in her home in Missouri; and Breonna Taylor, a Black woman and EMT who was shot and killed in her bed by the Louisville Metro Police Department in Kentucky.

In New York City, the Brooklyn DA’s office released stats on social-distancing enforcement: of the 40 people who were arrested for social-distancing violations from March 17 through May 4, 35 were Black, four were Latinx, and one was white. We’ve seen video after video of NYPD officers attacking and violently arresting people of color throughout the city, while they hand out masks to white people.

These actions are connected.

We are heartbroken, and we are furious. And yes, we are sometimes overwhelmed with feelings of helplessness and shame. But we cannot let those feelings allow us to look away or disengage. As SURJ National Director Erin Heaney writes, “At SURJ, we know that systems of white supremacy and other oppression rely on keeping white people and communities silent or actively opposed to movements for racial justice. We know our work is to break silence and organize more of our people into movements for racial justice and against white supremacy.”

Let this moment activate you.

The work of dismantling white supremacy needs to happen on both internal and systemic levels. Symbolic actions are not enough.

For some self-reflection, we encourage you to read “The Empathy Crisis of White America.” The piece asks us to consider why and how the national media pays attention to the murders it does:
“... it’s crucial for us to interrogate why it often takes video evidence of such senseless brutality in order for us to believe the victims’ families, or feel sympathy for their deaths. Are our feelings only activated when we ourselves can bear witness to brutality—when we can, from the safety of our own homes and the comfort of our white skin, replay these horrific tragedies on a loop?”This week, we’ve seen this in the different ways the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery, Nina Pop, and Breonna Taylor have been covered by national media - and, maybe, our own social media.

On a city-wide policy level, the Mayor’s proposed budget for the next fiscal year includes continued overinvestment in policing -- but significant cuts to social services, including public housing and education. Prioritizing policing over people is dangerous at any time, but especially in response to this pandemic. Read on for action you can take from home to advocate for a fair and equitable budget (under Calls to Make, below!).

Finally, read and review these alternatives to calling the police, made by Equality for Flatbush, and check out Justice Committee’s guide for how to CopWatch during COVID-19. There is a lot about the NYPD that we cannot control, so it is essential that we align our actions with our values in the ways we can.

Take good care, friends.


In solidarity,

SURJ NYC

We won't go back to normal

This week, several states across the country are beginning to reopen. Even in New York, where we’re still on PAUSE, people are beginning to settle into routines and talk about getting “back to normal.”

We think back to normal is impossible. And it’s also not what we want.

Normal has been living under white supremacy and racial capitalism. In New York City, normal has been a system where poverty, homelessness, criminalization, and now death all fall disproportionately on Black, Latinx, Asian and Indigenous New Yorkers because of structural attacks and exclusions.

You may have heard people talking about Arundhati Roy’s powerful piece “The Pandemic is a Portal” (and if you haven’t, have a read!). As we consider where this portal could take us, we also encourage you to read “No return to normal: For a post-pandemic liberation” by Max Haiven. The piece visions possible futures: one that digs into increased corporate greed, authoritarianism, and hyper-capitalism; and one grounded in mutual aid, solidarity, and re-learned cooperation and communal care.

At SURJ, we’re committed to fighting for the collective liberation of the latter. And in order to do that, white folks are going to need to refuse a “new normal” that remains rooted in a white supremacist status quo. We cannot shrug our shoulders and say well, that’s just how it is. We can’t stay complacent, or look away.

Just last week, Gotham Gazette reported that the City’s proposed budget for next year includes huge cuts to public housing, education, and delays the plan to close Rikers Island. While the Mayor has said these cuts are sad but necessary, we don’t agree: this public health crisis has shown how necessary it is to adequately resource communities.

We’ve got some concrete actions you can take to fight for a transformative future:

  • Come to our May chapter meeting this Thursday to continue this conversation! Read on for more information.  

  • Today is #GivingTuesday, and that’s a great reason to support our partners and movement leaders who are organizing hard to build a more just and liberated future. Several organizations have match offers that are active today only! See below and follow us on social media for links.

Take good care of yourselves, friends.

In solidarity,
SURJ NYC

2019 Year-End Event Highlights

Police Accountability Working Group

In 2019, the Police Accountability Working Group threw down to fight for justice for the family of Eric Garner, doing trial support, fundraising, and direct action to escalate pressure to #FirePantaleo and all the other officers involved in the murder and coverup. We also showed up to support the families of Delrawn Small, Saheed Vassell, Mohamed Bah, and more people killed by NYPD.

Another focus was to move money toward two orgs leading this work, CPR and Justice Committee. We supported over 5 fundraisers between the two orgs, including holding down all lunch costs during the Pantaleo trial and throwing our own house party fundraiser for JC.

We supported ongoing legislative work in Albany to #Repeal50a and pass the #SaferNY package of bills.

Finally, our little PAWG community grew and thrived this year with a solid base of committed organizers sharing in political education, personal development, and ongoing work.

Anti-Mass Incarceration Working Group

The Anti-Mass Incarceration working group spent much of 2019 mobilizing SURJ members to attend lobby days in Albany and make calls to Governor Cuomo and state legislators in support of our partners JLUSA's FREEnewyork campaign and RAPP's parole justice initiatives. We shared political education on pretrial laws and the parole board in our meetings, and held workshops in our communities to base build and mobilize people around the campaigns.

We also engaged in conversation to discuss what our role should be in response to NYC's borough-based jail construction plan and the #CLOSErikers campaign, while still attempting to mobilize turnout when requested to various hearings, rallies, and lobby days over the course of the multi-month ULURP process.

We held a fundraiser for RAPP at the end of the summer that recruited new monthly donors, and continue to volunteer in support of their base building efforts by flyering at events, phone banking at their office, providing data entry for research projects, and more.

Deep Canvassing

The Deep Canvassing crew began 2019 creating a script on police accountability and using it to hold conversations with folks in white, wealthy neighborhoods. In the fall, we took a deep look into our group and decided to try a new project—moving people to action within SURJ NYC. Now a Phonebanking group, we’re calling up folks who are on the verge of getting involved, starting conversations about our relationships to anti-racist activism, and inviting these folks to the next SURJ NYC events.

And more!

Alongside these working groups, SURJers organized in neighborhood working groups, ran calling-in workshops, and collaborated with SURJ National. All the while our Coordinating Committee, Communications, and Basebuilding teams worked to keep SURJ NYC organized, strategic, and welcoming.

November 2019 Event Highlights

Wednesday, November 6: RAPP Coalition Meeting 

SURJ members joined Release Aging People in Prison (RAPP) for their monthly coalition meeting. Every month RAPP organizers and members catch attendees up on their work, as well as upcoming events that you can attend or support. Oftentimes attendees break up into small groups where people who live in the same borough can brainstorm ways to organize together and immediate steps they can take in the coming month. Whether new to RAPP or already familiar with their work, all were welcome to the meeting! 

Thursday, November 7: Chapter Meeting with Special Guests from SURJ National 

SURJ NYC celebratd 10 years of Showing Up for Racial Justice! We welcomed SURJ Director Erin Heaney and Southern Organizing Director Evelyn Lynn, who helped us dig into our ideas about the US South, do some political education on the Southern Strategy, and spoke with our chapter about SURJ's new national 2020 strategy–including grassroots organizing to challenge white supremacy in elected office. Dinner was provided and there was an orientation for new members from 6:30-7:00pm.

Thursday, November 14: Fundraiser for Justice Committee 7pm

The Justice Committee (JC) supports and organize families who have lost loved ones to the police, empower low-income New Yorkers of color to hold the police accountable, and build safe, healthy communities without relying on law enforcement. SURJ’s Police Accountability Working Group hosted a fundraiser for JC to specifically help them with their goal of increasing their number of monthly donors by the end of the year. Monthly donors play an invaluable role in sustaining JC’s work to fight police violence and systemic racism in New York City. Consider becoming a monthly sustaining donor to Justice Committee here.

Sunday, November 24: Prison Industrial Complex Abolition 101 

SURJ members joined the New York City chapter of Critical Resistance to discuss what Prison Industrial Complex abolition means, the relationship between the carceral state, racial capitalism, and PIC abolition, and how an abolitionist vision and framework is essential to organizing. 

Sunday, November 24: Immigrant Rights Ally Training

Cosecha NYC and Close the Camps NYC held an ally training to reflect on what it means to practice allyship in the immigrant rights movement, the history of the immigrant rights movement and where we are today, and how to get more involved in immigrant rights organizing as an ally.

October 2019 Event Highlights

Thursday, October 3: SURJ NYC Monthly Chapter Meeting: The 1619 Project 

At this month's chapter meeting, we did some political education and dug into (parts of) The 1619 Project: "The 1619 Project is a major initiative from The New York Times observing the 400th anniversary of the beginning of American slavery. It aims to reframe the country’s history, understanding 1619 as our true founding, and placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of the story we tell ourselves about who we are." You can read the project here. 

Wednesday, October 9: American Indian Community House Meeting / Strategy Session 

SURJ members joined the Friends of AICH meeting / strategy session, while AICH still has space on the Lower East Side. Info was shared on upcoming events, political directions & ways to get involved. This meeting was welcome to all who want to support AICH & build community as/with local indigenous folks. 

Additionally, please consider donating to the Manna-hatta Fund which is an ongoing source of financial support for the American Indian Community House, NYC’s Indigenous hub. For 50 years, AICH has been a space of Indigenous sovereignty, culture, community, activism, arts, and wellness services. This is an opportunity for us to directly support Indigenous Peoples. All funds go directly to AICH.

Sunday, October 13 and Monday, October 14: 5th Annual Indigenous People's Day Celebration and Columbus Day protest on Randall’s Island.

SURJ members attended the protest, described as: “FREE and open to all, the two-day event dedicated to Indigenous cultural preservation, spiritual resistance and the celebration of over 527 years of survival since Columbus made landfall, serves as a supportive space for those looking to stand in solidarity, learn and find belonging.” 

Wednesday, October 16: Rally to repeal 50-a

On Thursday, Oct 17th, the Senate had a hearing regarding the law known as 50-a, which covers up NYPD misconduct. SURJ members showed up for a rally the day before to demand a full repeal. 50-a is a law that the de Blasio administration has interpreted very conservatively, claiming that the public doesn’t have the right to know when cops break the rules. SURJ members mobilized to fight for this crucial change to police transparency. 

Friday, October 18: Justice State of Mind, 90s Hip Hop Party to benefit Justice Committee

SURJ members joined our partners at Justice Committee (JC) for a night of great music, food, dancing, and company. Funds from this event helped JC support and organize families who have lost loved ones to the police, empower low-income New Yorkers of color to hold the police accountable, and build safe, healthy communities without relying on law enforcement. 

Sunday, October 20: SURJ Upper Manhattan Community Potluck w/ RAPP 

For this gathering, we were joined by members of the RAPP (Release Aging People in Prison) Campaign, who shared with us their work around parole justice and ending life imprisonment. RAPP is one of SURJ NYC's Accountability Partners, and members of SURJ NYC have been in relationship with them since the beginning of the campaign several years ago. Folks learned about their work, and the various ways SURJ members can be supporting it with our time, labor, and/or money! 

Tuesday, October 22: National Day of Protest to Stop Police Brutality

Folks stepped out for the 24th National Day of Protest to Stop Police Brutality, Repression and the Criminalization of a Generation! This coalition has been mobilizing every year since 1996 for a National Day of Protest on October 22nd to expose the epidemic of police brutality. There was a rally at 3:00pm at Union Square, and a march to Times Square at 5:00pm. 

September 2019 Event Highlights

Saturday, September 7: Equality for Flatbush Gala  

Equality for Flatbush (E4F) is a visionary, member-led grassroots organization that does anti-police repression, affordable housing, and anti-gentrification organizing Brooklyn-wide. Since 2013, E4F has effectively organized hundreds of tenants, small businesses, homeowners, and those impacted by police violence to stop evictions, win repairs, save small businesses, and build people power through trainings and community-led campaigns. SURJ members joined E4F on the dancefloor to raise $50K for Equality for Flatbush and celebrate with Imani Henry - founder and lead organizer - as he turns 50 this year! If you cannot attend, you can support E4F’s work by   making a donation here, or making a monthly sustaining donation here

Sunday, September 8: Deep Canvassing for Police Accountability 

When does a “hero cop” become a villain? We canvassed to ask folks about the Eric Garner case, more broadly and deeply exploring what accountability means to us, and how that connects to the politics of policing. Deep canvassing means sharing vulnerably about our own stake in the issue, and listening curiously to the people we meet. Conversations tend to be long, in-depth, and responsive to what arises--not just angling toward an “ask.” Because of that, they have the potential to transform both our targets and ourselves. And when we encounter folks who are aligned with us, we support them in taking action. As always no prior knowledge was needed, we learned and practiced together! 

Saturday, September 14: #NoBusinessWithICE: CLOSE THE CAMPS! 

SURJ members joined Close The Camps NYC in a march and a direct action targeting a company that profits from ICE’s abuse of immigrant lives. As part of a broader campaign to say NO to the concentration camps on the US border, #ClosetheCampsNYC has the following  demands of private companies: “Stop being complicit in the horrific violence against immigrant communities. Cancel all contracts with ICE and withdraw all support that allows the violent institution to continue to carry out its bloody mission.” 

Wednesday, September 18: Ending Life Imprisonment Panel   

The panel discussion featured Marc Mauer and Ashley Nellis, authors of “The Meaning of Life: The Case for Abolishing Life Sentences;” Jose Saldana of RAPP, and Saleem Holbrook of Pennsylvania’s Campaign Against Death by Incarceration (CADBI) and the Abolitionist Law Center. Both Jose Saldana and Saleem Holbrook are formerly incarcerated long-termers working to end life imprisonment.

Saturday, September 21: RAPP Fundraiser 

Release Aging People in Prison (RAPP) works to end mass incarceration and promote racial justice by getting elderly and infirm people out of prison. RAPP challenges a fundamental pillar of mass incarceration: reliance on a system of permanent punishment, a culture of retribution and revenge rather than rehabilitation and healing. SURJ planned a fundraiser for RAPP so they can pay directly impacted organizers throughout New York state. If you weren’t able to attend, please consider supporting RAPP’s work here.

Monday, September 23: United in Outrage: The Resistance March

Donald Trump wasin NYC to address the UN General Assembly on September 24. The evening before, SURJ members joined our friends at Rise and Resist to come together and march peacefully to protest the many injustices of the administration, its accomplices, its supporters, and the harm done in its name. Folks brought signs and banners proclaiming their fight, their issues, and the change they are working toward. Read more here 

Wednesday, September 25: SURJ National Webinar: 10 Years of Racial Justice

SURJ National held a webinar with Patrisse Cullors, Makani Themba, Carla Wallace, and Pam McMichael to discuss the past, present, and future of SURJ as it relates to the broader movement for racial, economic, social, and environmental justice. Pam McMichael and Carla Wallace are long time movement organizers and co-founders of SURJ. Patrisse Cullors and Makani Themba are revered movement leaders who shared their perspectives of how SURJ's work fits in a broader context and what is needed moving forward. This was a public call, open to all.

August 2019: SURJ NYC Unendorses the #CLOSErikers Campaign

SURJ NYC is committed to mobilizing white New Yorkers to decarcerate our city by closing Rikers Island and shrinking the population of our jails and prisons. 

Over the last several years, we have done this work alongside our accountability partner JustLeadershipUSA (JLUSA), supporting their #CLOSErikers campaign. Following Mayor DeBlasio’s commitment to close Rikers Island, there has been disagreement among various players in NYC about the Mayor’s plan to replace part of Rikers' capacity with one new and three expanded borough-based jails. In response, several campaigns have developed distinct demands and strategies. Most significantly, the #CLOSErikers campaign is advocating for approval and improvement of the Mayor's plan with what they believe to be transformative conditions, while the #NoNewJails (NNJ) campaign demands the closure of Rikers without building any new jails under any circumstances. 

Over the past few months, some of SURJ NYC’s individual members have been strongly supporting NNJ, some have been organizing powerfully with JLUSA, and we have been struggling together to come to an agreement about a collective way forward for SURJ NYC. Members have been particularly concerned about the seeming contradiction of organizing against white supremacy while supporting new or expanded jails, the urgent need to improve the conditions faced by currently incarcerated people, and the fear that Rikers may not close if the Mayor’s plan is rejected. There is also concern that the logic behind the Mayor's plan, implying that Rikers can only close if other jails are built or expanded, creates a false binary and normalizes incarceration. We have also put much thought into what it means to be a responsible partner to organizations we work with—many of whom have taken differing stances in this moment. In the resources linked below, you can read more about the nature of our members’ perspectives, the substance of the disagreements, and the conversations we’ve had at chapter meetings about this issue. While these discussions have happened with a great deal of respect, they have not moved those aligned with either campaign to a shared understanding of how SURJ NYC should move forward with regard to the Mayor’s plan.  

Because of the deep, substantive division within SURJ NYC about how to mobilize the power we’ve built in this crucial moment, SURJ NYC has decided to formally unendorse the #CLOSErikers campaign. SURJ NYC is currently endorsing neither campaign. 

While we cannot responsibly continue to endorse the #CLOSErikers campaign when so much of our membership opposes its strategy, we are unified in our commitment to working in partnership with JLUSA. We are proud of the work that we’ve done to stand in solidarity with JLUSA members, and of the relationships and trust that we’ve built with their organizers. We will continue to commit to that relationship, and to use our structures to support JLUSA’s #FREEnewyork and #2MillionVoices campaigns.

We will also continue to move our members into meaningful work and action to decarcerate our city.

We will provide political education that supports our membership to understand the ways that our carceral system is rooted in, and perpetuates, white supremacy. We will share resources on abolitionist theory and practice, making space for differing perspectives, and centering the perspectives of directly impacted people. And we will equip our members to take immediate and meaningful action by sharing calls to action, events, and information from both the #NoNewJails and #CLOSErikers campaigns, ensuring that members are aware of every opportunity to support this work. 

To learn about political education and campaign events, make sure you subscribe to our eblast, and follow us on Facebook or Twitter. To learn more about abolition and this issue, start with some of the resources below.

 

On Abolition

On the Campaigns

From #CLOSERikers supporters:

From NNJ supporters:

June/July 2019 Event Highlights

Wednesday, June 5th: RAPP (Release Aging People in Prison) Monthly Coalition Meeting

On June 5th at 6pm RAPP hosted their monthly coalition meeting by phone. On the call, they discussed updates, actions and next steps for all of RAPP’s initiatives (Elder Parole, Fair and Timely Parole and fully staffing the Parole Board) as the end of the state legislative session on June 19th was approaching.

Thursday, June 20: World Refugee Day Rally and March

We joined the African Communities Together (ACT) and the City of Refuge Coalition for their third annual World Refugee Day Action. Hundreds of New Yorkers from dozens of refugee, immigrant, religious, and community organizations staged a march from the New York Public Library and rally in front of Trump World Tower and the United Nations. Read more about the action and RSVP on Facebook

Tuesday, June 25: Project Reach Art Show Fundraiser

One Art Space hosted an exhibit that raised funds for Project Reach as rent continues to rise in Chinatown.

Thursday, July 11: SURJ NYC Chapter Meeting

While SURJ NYC is clear about the necessity and urgency of closing Rikers Island, there has been debate both among SURJ’s membership and groups we are in relationship with–especially the CLOSErikers and NoNewJails campaigns–about the best way to reach that goal. At July’s chapter meeting, we discussed various proposals around potential next steps. If you’re unfamiliar with the matter, we recommend watching the Manhattan hearings on the Borough-Based Jail Plan to learn more. You can watch Part One here, and Part Two here through Gale Brewer’s Facebook page. 

Thursday, July 18, 6:00-8:00pm and Saturday, July 20, 12:00pm-2:00pm: Nonviolent Direct Action Training

Our friends at Cosecha and coalition partners planned a direct action on August 10 in NYC to say NO to the concentration camps on the US border. There was a series of non-violent direct action trainings leading up to the action.

May 2019 Event Highlights

Saturday, May 4th: NYC Cannabis Parade and Rally

The NYC Cannabis Parade and Rally's mission is to end the prohibition of cannabis at all levels, recognizing the profound effects that discriminatory enforcement of drug laws has had on communities of color. The event’s coalition partners included Empire State NORML and the New York office of the Drug Policy Alliance, which is working on a number of campaigns to shift New York’s drug policy away from the criminal justice system and towards a public health and safety approach. Whether you marched or not, the organizers ask you to support advocacy organizations like the Start SMART campaign, working to “stop the ineffective, racially biased, and unjust enforcement of marijuana prohibition and to create a new, well-regulated, and inclusive marijuana industry that is rooted in racial and economic justice.”

 

Saturday, May 11: Deep Canvassing for Police Accountability

When does a “hero cop” become a villain? On this day, canvassers asked folks about the Eric Garner case, and more broadly and deeply exploring what accountability means to us, and how that connects to the politics of policing. Deep canvassing means sharing vulnerably about our own stake in the issue, and listening curiously to the people we meet. Conversations tend to be long, in-depth, and responsive to what arises--not just angling toward an “ask.” Because of that, they have the potential to transform both our targets and ourselves. We also recruited folks for the trial (see below!). No prior knowledge was needed, we learn and practice together.

 

Monday, May 13th - Friday, May 24th: Showing Up for the Family of Eric Garner

NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo faces charges for the murder of Eric Garner in an administrative disciplinary hearing with the Civilian Complaint Review Board. His family needs lots of volunteer support over these two weeks to ensure that there is some accountability for his death. During this time, SURJ members showed up to help pack the court, take notes, cover lunch for the family, and more.

Monday, May 13th: Our Plan: #CLOSErikers Bronx Community Forum

At this forum, directly impacted leaders from the #CLOSErikers campaign articulated their plan to close Rikers on the fastest possible timeline.

Wednesday, May 29th: Anti-Mass Incarceration Working Group Meeting

SURJ’s Anti-Mass Incarceration Working Group met to discuss ways to move into action against mass incarceration in NYC, New York State, and beyond. This month, we talked about criminalization and incarceration of pregnant people in the context of recent abortion bans passed in states across the country.


April 2019 Event Highlights

Wednesday, April 3: #Justice4Saheed Rally and Thursday, April 4: Saheed Vassell Memorial Vigil

In light of the news of the Attorney General not bringing charges against NYPD officers responsible for killing Saheed Vassell, we joined Saheed’s family, Communities United for Police Reform, and Brooklyn Movement Center to demand accountability for his murder. If you were unable to join, you can still help amplify Saheed’s family’s demands for justice via social media by following and sharing @changethenypd, @BKMovement and #Justice4Saheed content on Twitter.

The following day, we brought love and joined Saheed’s family to mark one year since he was killed, at the site where he was killed. Saheed was gunned down at roughly 4:45pm.

Thursday, April 4: April Chapter Meeting: So You’re a Gentrifier. Now What?

This month's chapter meeting addressed the issues of gentrification and displacement–what it is, what it means to be a gentrifier, and how to make choices that mitigate your harm to working class, POC, and immigrant communities. We also highlighted ways to actively support anti-gentrification efforts around NYC, including by supporting POC-led grassroots organizations like VOCAL-NY, Equality for Flatbush, and Queens Neighborhoods United.

Thursday, April 11: Moral March for Housing

In recognition of the upcoming expiration of tenants’ rights, we joined community, faith, & labor leaders to fight evictions. There was a rally at Abyssinian Baptist Church, followed by a march to the State Office Building to hold a vigil for those who have been evicted thanks to weak tenants' rights and unaffordable rent. 100 New Yorkers are evicted every day. It's now or never for housing justice— We need Universal Rent Control!

Tuesday, April 16-Wednesday, April 17: Scholars’ Academy & Project Reach’s Intensive Anti-Discrimination Clinic: Unpacking Racism, Sexism, Islamophobia, and Transphobia

This 12-hour, city-wide, Anti-Discrimination Training brought together a diverse community of 30-40 educators, service providers, social workers, administrators and parents/guardians from schools and community-based organizations in Queens. Speaker Corey Johnson, the New York City Council, and Project Reach seek to establish community and school-based Intergenerational Anti-Discrimination Teams of young people and adults trained to address bullying, implicit bias and discrimination in their communities. Drawing from 40 years of anti-discrimination and social justice training, Project Reach offered a unique opportunity to individuals, organizations and schools to experience its most successful and impactful workshops. All adults who work with young people and are committed to ending discrimination and fighting for social justice were encouraged to attend.

Monday, April 29: Call to Organize White Men Against Patriarchy and White Supremacy

This video call was a step in creating a national network of white men organizing other white men to be more effective accomplices to People of Color, women, femmes, trans and gender non-conforming folks in the struggle for collective liberation. While white men benefit most from white supremacy and patriarchy, our allegiance to these systems also damages us: in exchange for dominance, we deny ourselves the ability to work in solidarity with others and permit our own exploitation by more powerful individuals and institutions. By choosing instead to stand and fight with those disempowered by white supremacy and patriarchy, we can achieve mutual interests of justice, liberation, and self-actualization. This is an affinity group: anyone, regardless of race or gender, is welcome and encouraged to join. On this call, we discussed the need for this work, learn about the work people are already doing, and consider where each of us can plug in to engage our organizations, institutions, and communities.

Tuesday, April 30th: #HALTsolitary advocacy day in Albany!

CAIC (Campaign for Alternatives to Isolated Confinement) traveled to Albany on April 30th for a day of action/advocacy.  We are at a critical moment in the push to pass the HALT (Humane Alternatives to Long-Term) Solitary Confinement Act, A. 2500/ S. 1623 to keep all people out of isolation in New York State prisons and jails. The Assembly passed HALT last year and the Senate has the votes to pass HALT now.  People in solitary are subjected to inhumane treatment known to cause devastating psychological damage: 22-24 hours a day in a cell the size of an elevator with no meaningful human contact or programs & recreation alone in a cage.  


March 2019 Event Highlights

Thursday, March 7: Monthly Chapter Meeting: Interrogating Intersectionality

Traveling from academic papers to everyday tweets, intersectionality has evolved into quite the social justice buzzword. Many of us have heard the term used by friends, teachers, celebrities, or have used it ourselves. The term, though, was coined by Black feminist legal theorist Kimberlé Crenshaw in 1989 as a framework to describe the oppression experienced by Black women: Crenshaw defined intersectionality as “a lens through which you can see where power comes and collides, where it interlocks and intersects.” With the misuse of the term widespread–particularly among white people in social justice circles–we dedicated our monthly meeting to understanding the term in its origins as articulated by women of color in order to transparently and thoughtfully explore its meaning and how it applies to our work in SURJ.

Wednesday, March 13: Understanding and Organizing to End Racial Capitalism

SURJ works to undermine white support for racism, and broaden the base of white folks showing up for racial justice as part of a powerful multi racial movement for transformative change. But what about this unjust economic system? How does racism help keep capitalism in place? SURJ National and leading activist scholar Robin DG Kelley held a webinar on what racialized capitalism means for our work and how class impacts white people’s role in the fight to end oppression.

Thursday, March 14: #CLOSErikers Manhattan Community Forum, and Wednesday, March 20th: #CLOSErikers Brooklyn Community Forum

In the many months since announcing its plans to close Rikers, the City has not shown a commitment to decriminalize and decarcerate as fast as is actually possible, which is major marker of where New York City is on moving toward racial justice. JustLeadershipUSA and its partners demand further decarceration and a faster route to decarceration. In March there were two community forums to hear directly from the experiences of formerly incarcerated leaders and to understand why they feel approving borough based facilities that prioritize shrinking the citywide jail system is urgent while continuing to fight for decarceration, improving conditions for incarcerated people in New York City, and ensuring that every last individual is free from Rikers Island as fast as possible.

Monday, March 25: Anti-Mass Incarceration Working Group Meeting

SURJ’s Anti-Mass Incarceration working group met to learn about ways to plug in the campaign to end mass incarceration in NYC and across the state. This month, we discussed how to end cash bail and decarcerate jails while also ensuring that survivors of harm or violence are protected.

Ongoing: Call Your Electeds about Universal Rent Control

Help stop homelessness and gentrification by asking your legislator to sign onto bills for universal rent control in New York City! Read more about the platform here. You can find your New York state senator here and your assembly member here.

February 2019 Event Highlights

Tuesday, February 5: New Sanctuary Coalition Pro Se Clinic

New Sanctuary Coalition runs a weekly clinic staffed by non-attorney volunteers and supervised by experienced immigrants rights organizers and immigration lawyers. The clinic helps people identify ways to get relief from deportation and detention; access other immigration-related benefits; understand their rights so they can fight their own case; apply for asylum; prepare for court appearances or interviews; and much more. They’re seeing tremendous growth in the number of immigrants seeking help and are looking for new volunteers—no previous or legal experience is necessary. This clinic is held every Tuesday.

Thursday, February 7: Chapter Meeting: Stopping Gentrification: What You Need to Know About NY Rent Laws

SURJ-NYC’s February chapter meeting focused on learning how to fight gentrification in NYC. New York State rent laws expire this year, creating an opportunity to win stronger renter protections for all of us. In our city, landlords exploit loopholes in rent laws (and poor enforcement of laws) to push out tenants of color and low-income tenants so they can raise rents and profit off of gentrification. Mid- and high-income tenants are sometimes unwitting accomplices in this process—but don’t have to be! Folks learned about the rights and responsibilities we have under current New York State rent laws and how we can support a campaign to improve rent laws in Albany this spring.

Sunday, February 10: #FREEnewyork Workshop on Bail & Discovery Reform

New York is on the verge of addressing its jail crisis, with Governor Cuomo and Democratic lawmakers speaking out in favor of bail and discovery reforms this year. However, this momentum makes it essential that we put pressure on them to do things right, and in order to do that we need to have a clear understanding of what we want bail and discovery reforms to accomplish. Members of SURJ-NYC and the Village Zendo co-facilitated a workshop to help our communities understand the issues of bail and discovery, and how the two work together to fill jails across the state with primarily low-income black and brown people. It was an afternoon of political education (and snacks!), and folks left with the tools needed to join the fight to #FREEnewyork in 2019.

Monday, February 18: Canvass for Universal Rent Control With The Metropolitan Council On Housing

Folks joined the Metropolitan Council on Housing to canvass for Statewide Universal Rent Control, which calls for an end to vacancy decontrol, makes preferential rents last for the duration of the tenancy, and the elimination of the 20% vacancy bonus, as well as permanent rent hikes caused by MCIs (major capital improvements) and IAIs (individual apartment increases).

February 14-15: Project Reach’s City-Wide Intensive Anti-Discrimination Clinic

This 12-hour, city-wide, Anti-Discrimination Training brought together a diverse community of 30-40 educators, service providers, social workers, administrators and parents/guardians from schools and community-based organizations in all five boroughs. Speaker Corey Johnson, the New York City Council, and Project Reach seek to establish community and school-based Intergenerational Anti-Discrimination Teams of young people and adults trained to address bullying, implicit bias and discrimination in their communities. All adults who work with young people and are committed to ending discrimination and fighting for social justice were encouraged to attend.


January 2019 Event Highlights

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Sunday, January 13: Court Watch NYC Training

Court Watch NYC is a collaborative project of VOCAL-NY, Brooklyn Community Bail Fund, and 5 Boro Defenders. By joining Court Watch NYC, you will be the eyes and ears holding District Attorneys accountable in Brooklyn and Manhattan. Court Watch NYC holds regular trainings for people to learn how to collect real-time data of what is actually happening in courtrooms, record narratives that are not captured by the data, and contribute to accountability actions.  

Monday, January 14: #FREEnewyork Lobby Day with Alliance for Quality Education  

The #FREEnewyork campaign partnered with Alliance for Quality Education for an Albany Lobby Day. Together, we demanded jail decarceration and education justice! The day included lobby visits, speakouts, a press conference, and direct action calling on New York to divest from incarceration and instead invest in schools.

Monday, January 28: Webinar: Connecting the Dots: History of Policing with Andrea Ritchie

SURJ National had its the first webinar in the 2019 series "Connecting the Dots: Border Militarism, US Domestic and Foreign Policy, and the Myriad of Connections to Racial Capitalism." Andrea Ritchie joined for an overview of the history of policing in the US and how that history continues to impact the role of policing in the US today. Read more about her and her work here.

Tuesday, January 29: Parole Justice Advocacy Day

RAPP, the Parole Preparation Project, and others from around NY State met with NYS elected officials, march and rally to demand: 1. A fully staffed Parole Board with Parole Commissioners who have professional backgrounds in rehabilitation; 2. Elder parole, which allows all incarcerated older people, aged 55 plus an opportunity for parole release after serving 15 consecutive years in prison; 3. A parole process that centers change and transformation instead of punishment and re-sentencing. Free transportation was provided from NYC and made available in other regions of the state as needed. Food was also provided.

End of 2018 Event Highlights

The end of 2018 was marked by lots of parties and social gatherings bringing together organizers and raising money for organizations run by and for people of color.

Friday, November 9: Screening of Ava Duvernay’s 13th at MINKA Brooklyn

SURJ members came together to view Ava Duvernay’s documentary on mass incarceration, participate in a group discussion, and build community. Co-hosted by MINKA and the Brooklyn Center for Sacred Activism.

Thursday, November 15: Parole Preparation Project Welcome Home Party and Fundraiser

Folks came together to celebrate the homecoming of the many Parole Preparation Project applicants who were recently released from prison after serving decades inside. There was food, drinks, music, and great company! Tickets were sold sliding scale, starting at $25.

Saturday, December 8: Rage Against White Supremacy: A Fundraiser with SURJ Central Brooklyn

The SURJ Central Brooklyn chapter danced out all our fury at 2018 while raising money to support organizing in our neighborhood! All donations went directly to the Brooklyn Movement Center, who are building black and brown power in Central Brooklyn and leading efforts in our neighborhood to fight gentrification and police violence.

Sunday, December 9: Send Them Home for the Holidays: A Letter-Writing Party

SURJ members joined Survived and Punished NY for "Send them Home for the Holidays," a holiday card writing party for those behind prison walls in New York State. Sending cards and small gift packages is one way that we can lessen the loneliness experienced during the winter time.

Thursday, December 13: Welcome Home Fundraiser

This merry everything holiday party raised funds for people leaving prison on parole, in association with Release Aging People in Prison (RAPP) and the Parole Preparation Project (PPP). It was a night of food, drinks, stories, music, and some wealth redistribution! Tickets were sold on a recommended sliding scale of $25-$100, but no one was turned away for lack of funds. Check out this video clip of the event to see more!

October 2018 Event Highlights

Wednesday, October 3: Bronx Public Scoping hearing re: Mayor's Borough Based jails plan

From September 20th - October 3rd, the Mayor's Office of Criminal Justice held Scoping Hearings on their proposal to close Rikers and move to a system of borough-based jails, one each in Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens, and the Bronx. Supporters of the #CLOSErikers campaign showed up at these hearings with a strong and coordinated voice that grounded the conversation in the humanity of the people currently and formerly incarcerated on Rikers Island, and the human rights violations they face on a daily basis there.

Thursday, October 4: SURJ NYC October Chapter Meeting: What’s Class Got To Do with It?

This month’s chapter meeting was a conversation and reflection about how class in the US class system supports white supremacy, and what we can do to challenge and undermine intertwined systems of economic exploitation and racism. This meeting included two parallel conversations: one on the intersection of class and race generally, focusing on the stereotypes of the white working class that have gained steam after the 2016 election, and a separate conversation about how operating in a more class-conscious way could improve SURJ NYC’s work specifically.

Sunday, October 7 and Monday, October 8: Indigenous Peoples Celebration

With Redhawk Native American Arts Council, this event honored water protectors and featuring performances, vendors, guest speakers, and more! Please also consider making a donation to support the event, and the movement to change outdated holidays.

Sunday, October 21: Make Calls, Raise $ Money with SURJ Central Brooklyn

SURJ Central Brooklyn had a night of political engagement! At this meeting, we worked on two sets of projects: 1) phonebanking for Andrew Gounardes, who is running in Brooklyn for a key state senate seat, and 2) fundraising for the Brooklyn Movement Center. We also had pizza, got to know each other, and learned how to plug into SURJ’s work!

Tuesday, October 30: SURJ National Indigenous Solidarity Networking Call

At the national level, SURJ’s Indigenous Solidarity Working Group organized a call to connect local activists who want to help deepen the dialogue around Indigenous sovereignty and anti-colonial work in their various organizations and movements. This group will aim to work in solidarity and in mutual interest to learn the histories of the land we live on; our own histories; and to protect water, life, and land; and come into ways of relating that are not based on erasure, theft, and genocide, but instead upon humility, reciprocity, responsibility, respect, and mutual care for all forms of life, the planet, and future generations.


September 2018 Event Highlights

Wednesday, September 12: Race & Love at Brooklyn Free School: Preparing Kids to Dismantle White Supremacy

Anastasia Higginbotham, Brooklyn Free School parent and author, hosted a discussion and shared "Not My Idea: A Book About Whiteness," the newest addition to her children's books series "Ordinary Terrible Things." Childcare was provided.

Monday, September 17: VOCAL-NY Annual Gala

In the past year, VOCAL-NY and its partner organizations launched Court Watch NYC, passed a law to require city shelters to train staff and residents on how to reverse an overdose, and distributed over 110,000 sterile syringes to communities in need in Brooklyn. Folks came out to celebrate these and VOCAL’s many other accomplishments!

Tuesday, September 18 through Tuesday, September 25: Mass Bail Out Volunteer Trainings

The Mass Bail Out is a collaborative effort to free 450 people from Rikers Island in early October. It will be the largest bail out action held to date and a truly historic moment in the fight to end mass incarceration. The action will be powered by more than 200 volunteers, who will receive all the money and information required to bail out two of their fellow New Yorkers. People attended trainings to work the Bail Out. More information can be found here.

Saturday, September 22: Guide to City Government Workshop

Whether you are an organizer determining targets and tactics for a campaign, a concerned citizen looking for the most effective place to seek help or air grievances, or just curious about how things work, this workshop provided a helpful primer or refresher on the basics of engaging with local elected officials. You can find more info here.

Thursday, September 27: Elected Civilian Review Board Press Conference and Hearing

The Campaign for an Elected Civilian Review Board is making real progress to hold the NYPD accountable for violence. This press conference was an opportunity for people to rally at City Hall by participating, holding photos of victims of NYPD violence, or just being there to support the cause. After the press conference, a key City Hall hearing started at 6pm, and testimony was given to the commission. To volunteer or for more info, email StopPoliceViolenceNYC@gmail.com.


August 2018 Event Highlights

Thursday, August 9th: Fundraiser for Black Love Resists in the Rust

Folks came out to a house party on August 9th to support & get to know the work of Black Love Resists in the Rust. BLRR—launched in 2017 by Natasha Soto and Shaketa Redden in Buffalo, NY—is a transformational organizing group committed to the liberation of Black folks and the building of community and political power in Buffalo, NY and the accountability partner of Buffalo SURJ. In 2017, they organized and WON a campaign to abolish Buffalo’s “Strike Force,” the deadliest police unit in the city. This fundraiser allowed people to learn more about our work, build relationships between organizers in NYC and Western NY, and eat/drink well in Harlem.

Monday, August 20: #2MillionVoices Volunteer Night

JLUSA was founded on the principle that “those closest to the problem are closest to the solution, but furthest from resources and power.” The #2MillionVoices campaign seeks to remedy that disparity by bringing incarcerated voices to the front lines. On this night, people helped process membership requests from people incarcerated across the country and survey responses from incarcerated members throughout New York State.

Tuesday, August 28: Picture the Homeless Protest and Rally

The Civil Rights campaign at Picture the Homeless embarked on a major campaign to make bathroom access easier for ALL New Yorkers, housed and homeless alike.  

Friday, August 31: International Overdose Awareness Day March

Folks joined VOCAL-NY at this year’s International Overdose Awareness Day march to “mourn those we’ve lost, and fight like hell for the living.” Last year, New York City lost 1,441 lives to overdoses—that’s more deaths than from homicides, suicides, and traffic accidents combined. The impact is heightened for people who are marginalized: overdose is the leading cause of death among people living in shelters; people leaving incarceration are 40 times more likely to overdose in the first two weeks after release; and last year, the Black community had an 80% increase in fatal overdoses. Activists from across the city gathered at the morgue to mourn and remember the lives we have lost, then march to Governor Cuomo’s office to demand he take real action to end overdose now!

Ongoing donation: Support the Trans Asylum Seekers in Charlottesville and Queens

We have the opportunity to continue supporting trans asylum seekers who have been released to sponsors in Charlottesville, and to fight for the release of one who is sponsored from Queens. Donations will cover food, clothings, transportation costs, and lawyer fees among other necessities.  \Please read more about these courageous women and donate if you are able.

June/July 2018 Event Highlights

For the first two months of summer, SURJ NYC focused on a wide variety of issues, including reparations to Black people, advanced court watch, the second anniversary of Delrawn Small’s death at the hands of the NYPD, action security training, and many others!

Tuesday, June 12th: COURT WATCH BEYOND THE BASICS: Drug Policy

As NYC DAs unveil new plans to "divert" people charged with drug possession and to also stop prosecuting marijuana possession cases - it's important that all court watchers are up to date on new DA promises so that we can hold them accountable. In this training, participants learned about DA policies and practices around drug crimes and got trained on what to watch out for in the courtroom.

Thursday, June 21: Monthly Chapter Meeting: The Why and How of Reparations to Black People

This month's chapter meeting drew on the leadership of the Movement for Black Lives, Safety Pin Box, and others to explore the case for paying reparations to Black people. We dug into how we as white people can do this both in the here and now and in bigger, structural ways in the future. We explored the meaning of reparations for white people with different class positions. As regularly happens at chapter meetings there was a 30-minute orientation for those new to SURJ prior to the main meeting.

Tuesday, June 19: Juneteenth Statewide Protests to #FREEnewyork

From our accountability partner, JLUSA: “June 19th, also known as Juneteenth, commemorates the abolition of slavery. But as directly impacted communities know, we are not yet free. On June 19th, we call out everyday injustice occurring in courthouses across the state: Unaffordable bails. Mass pretrial incarceration. Guilty until proven innocent. A price on your freedom. ” Protests occurred outside courthouses around the state and here in NYC. 

Thursday, June 28: House Party for CPR

SURJ NYC threw a summer house party to raise money for Communities United for Police Reform (CPR), a comprehensive campaign to end discriminatory and abusive policing in New York City. People enjoyed food, drinks, music and an opportunity to hear more about CPR's current work. Suggested donation was $50, but donations of any size are encouraged—no one was turned away for lack of funds! Missed it? You can still donate here.

Monday, July 2: Vigil for Delrawn Small

On July 4, 2016, NYPD Officer Wayne Isaacs murdered Delrawn Small, who was unarmed, on the corner of Atlantic Ave. and Bradford St. in East New York. In spite of murdering Delrawn in front of his family, letting him bleed out in the street without offering CPR or any other aid, and lying about what had happened, Isaacs is still an NYPD officer, collecting a city paycheck, and no charges have been filed against him. Protesters commemorated the second anniversary of Small’s murder on this day. More details in the Facebook event

Tuesday, July 10: Action Security Training

At this training, people learned how to participate in a team that works to keep protesters safe from cars, the police, and counter-demonstrators at rallies, marches, and protests. Attending this training allows people you to support upcoming #FREEnewyork actions, police accountability demonstrations, and much more.

Saturday, July 14: Anti-Gentrification Deep Canvassing, Crown Heights

Deep canvassing is a tool for breaking through white supremacy culture and calling our white neighbors into the fight for racial justice. We collaborated with the Crown Heights neighborhood group to deep canvass our white neighbors in gentrifying communities about our attitudes toward the police and alternatives to getting them involved in conflicts. Attendance was welcome to all; no prior knowledge needed.  

Wednesday, July 25: Phonebanking for Deep Canvass Recruitment

So many people have signed up for SURJ but don't know where to start. At this meeting, we called SURJ folks, connecting on our shared commitment to anti-racist action, and offering concrete opportunities to get involved. Folks were so glad to be given the opportunity to participate! Whether or not they have space in their lives in the immediate future, the conversation lifts up their stake in this work going forward - not to mention lifting up our own! This work is sometimes useful for the deep canvassing project, and always liberatory for ourselves and useful for the movement. It's fun and fulfilling because it's an act of relationship-building and solidarity, not sales.

Ongoing: Pledge To Build A World Without Police With SURJ National

SURJ is inviting white folks across the country to examine our relationship to policing, especially given the recent, high profile incidents of white people calling the police to report Black people for doing all manner of things, including: sitting in a Starbucks, having a barbecue, sleeping in their own dorm room, renting an AirBnB, eating at Waffle House, golfing, walking through their own neighborhood, driving with leaves on their car, and more. Learn more and sign the pledge!

 

May 2018 Event Highlights

In May 2018, with the weather getting warmer, SURJ-NYC’s monthly chapter meeting was a potluck picnic in Washington Square Park. We also supported and encouraged folks to attend various events and workshops around the city, including a day of deep canvassing, a rally to demand accountability for Saheed Vassell’s death, and a fundraising concert for the Elected Civilian Review Board.

Wednesday, May 2: Justice for Saheed Vassell Rally

May 2nd marked four weeks since Saheed Vassell was killed by the NYPD. SURJ joined Saheed’s family and community in rallying to demand the names and disciplinary records of all officers involved, the release of all unedited surveillance video of the shooting, and an explanation for why SRG officers were on the scene.

Sunday, May 6: Anti-Gentrification Deep Canvassing - Park Slope

Deep canvassing is a tool for breaking through white supremacy culture and calling in our white neighbors to the fight for racial justice. This day of action was part of an ongoing collaboration with two central Brooklyn SURJ neighborhood groups to deep canvass our white neighbors in gentrifying communities about our attitudes toward the police and alternatives to getting them involved in conflicts.

Ongoing Until May 11th: Mama’s Bail Out NYC

All over the country, communities are coming together to show love and support to Black mothers who are separated from their families because of the punitive cash bail system.  Here in New York City, bail bonds companies take advantage of those who are most vulnerable—and unfortunately due to the inaction in City Hall and Albany, that won’t stop anytime soon. VOCAL-NY’s goal for this year’s Black Mama Bail Out Day is to raise $30,000 by May 11th to pay the bail of as many mothers as we can.

Saturday, May 12: Court Watch NYC Training

Court Watch NYC is a collaborative project of VOCAL-NY, Brooklyn Community Bail Fund, and 5 Borough Defenders. Court Watch volunteers collect real-time data of what is actually happening in courtrooms, record narratives that are not captured by the data, and contribute to accountability actions. On this day, people learned to be the eyes and ears holding District Attorneys accountable in Brooklyn and Manhattan.

Thursday, May 17: UPLIFT! BROOKLYN: feat. Bajah, Resistance Revival Chorus & more!

The NYC Campaign for an Elected Civilian Review Board hosted a fundraising concert as part of the Sound Mind Collective's Uplift! Brooklyn series. The ECRB campaign seeks to hold police accountable for their misconduct through more equitable and transparent oversight structures. All proceeds supported the campaign. It was a night of music and activation, where we celebrated movement towards a safer, more just NYC.

Thursday, May 31: Survived & Punished Letter-Writing Night

On this night, folks joined Survived and Punished, NYU Prison Education Program, and Project NIA to write letters to survivors of gender violence who are incarcerated in New York State prisons, and learn about the #FreeThemAll Mass Commutations campaign.

April 2018 Event Highlights

In the wake of Saheed Vassell’s murder at the hands of the NYPD, SURJ focused its April chapter meeting on alternatives to calling the police. Other events included court packing to support Merci Chrisette, marching to mark the 50th anniversary of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination, and continued Anti-Mass Incarceration work and support for incarcerated people.

Wednesday, April 4: To The Promised Land March

People gathered and walked through Harlem with leaders, artists and activists to hold reverence for and celebrate the life of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the 50th anniversary of his assassination. The event was hosted by Black Lives Matter Greater New York, Peace Accelerators, and One Tribe Ventures, among others. More information can be found on the website

Friday, April 13 and Saturday, April 14: Alliance of Families for Justice Regional Conference

Building on the momentum of last year’s March for Justice, this was the first of a series of six regional conferences around New York state exploring the impacts of mass incarceration on families and communities.

Monday, April 16 - Tuesday, April 24: #Fight4Merci Trial Support

Merci Chrisette, a Black trans woman, is facing 7 years in prison for defending herself after being harassed by a stranger on the train. After she turned herself in and was detained in a male facility on Rikers Island, she was released on bail with the support of over 270 contributors. The #Fight4Merci Collective asked supporters to fill the courtroom every day Merci goes before the judge. Learn more about Merci’s case here.

Thursday, April 19: Chapter Meeting: Alternatives to Calling the Police

In the wake of the NYPD’s murder of Saheed Vassell on April 4 in Crown Heights, this month’s chapter meeting focused on what to do instead of calling the cops—particularly in gentrifying communities. This was the fourth police killing in the city in the past nine months (the others being Dwayne Jeune, Miguel Richards, and Mario Sanabria), and part of the long history of the NYPD’s mistreatment and killings of people with disabilities and/or in emotional distress. Participants learned how to plug into SURJ NYC’s ongoing work—with organizations like Communities United for Police Reform and Justice Committee—to end police violence.

Wednesday, April 25: #2MillionVoices Volunteer Nights

Participants helped JLUSA process membership requests from people incarcerated across the country and survey responses from incarcerated members throughout New York State.

Ongoing: Call Your State Senator to Support Reform of New York’s Bail and Discovery Laws

Want to help #FREEnewyork today? Make a quick call to your State Senator to ask them to co-sponsor two recently introduced bills (or thank them if they are already co-sponsors): S3579-A, a bail reform bill introduced by Senator Gianaris, and S7722, a discovery law reform bill introduced by Senators Bailey and Benjamin.